$where
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Definition
$where
Important
Server-side JavaScript Deprecated
Starting in MongoDB 8.0, server-side JavaScript functions (
$accumulator
,$function
,$where
) are deprecated. MongoDB logs a warning when you run these functions.Use the
$where
operator to pass either a string containing a JavaScript expression or a full JavaScript function to the query system. The$where
provides greater flexibility, but requires that the database processes the JavaScript expression or function for each document in the collection. Reference the document in the JavaScript expression or function using eitherthis
orobj
.
Compatibility
You can use $where
for deployments hosted in the following
environments:
MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud
MongoDB Enterprise: The subscription-based, self-managed version of MongoDB
MongoDB Community: The source-available, free-to-use, and self-managed version of MongoDB
Syntax
The $where
operator has the following form:
{ $where: <string|JavaScript Code> }
Note
Note
Aggregation Alternatives Preferred
The $expr
operator allows the use of
aggregation expressions within
the query language. The $function
and
$accumulator
allows users to define custom aggregation expressions
in JavaScript if the provided
pipeline operators
cannot fulfill your application's needs.
Given the available aggregation operators:
The use of
$expr
with aggregation operators that do not use JavaScript (i.e. non-$function
and non-$accumulator
operators) is faster than$where
because it does not execute JavaScript and should be preferred if possible.However, if you must create custom expressions,
$function
is preferred over$where
.
Behavior
Available JavaScript Properties and Functions
map-reduce operations
and $where
operator expressions cannot access certain global functions or
properties, such as db
, that are available in
mongosh
.
The following JavaScript functions and properties are available to
map-reduce operations
and $where
operator expressions:
Available Properties | Available Functions | |
---|---|---|
args MaxKey MinKey | assert() BinData() DBPointer() DBRef() doassert() emit() gc() HexData() hex_md5() isNumber() isObject() ISODate() isString() | Map() MD5() NumberInt() NumberLong() ObjectId() print() printjson() printjsononeline() sleep() Timestamp() tojson() tojsononeline() tojsonObject() UUID() version() |
elemMatch
Only apply the $where
query operator to top-level
documents. The $where
query operator will not work inside a
nested document, for instance, in an $elemMatch
query.
Considerations
Do not use global variables.
$where
evaluates JavaScript and cannot take advantage of indexes. Therefore, query performance improves when you express your query using the standard MongoDB operators (e.g.,$gt
,$in
).In general, you should use
$where
only when you cannot express your query using another operator. If you must use$where
, try to include at least one other standard query operator to filter the result set. Using$where
alone requires a collection scan.
Using normal non-$where
query statements provides the
following performance advantages:
JavaScript Enablement
To use $where
(or $function
,
$accumulator
, or mapReduce
), you must have
server-side scripting enabled (default).
However, if you do not use these operations, disable server-side scripting:
For a
mongod
instance, seesecurity.javascriptEnabled
configuration option or--noscripting
command-line option.For a
mongos
instance, seesecurity.javascriptEnabled
configuration option or the--noscripting
command-line option.
Unsupported Array and String Functions
MongoDB 6.0 upgrades the internal JavaScript engine used for
server-side JavaScript,
$accumulator
, $function
, and $where
expressions and from MozJS-60 to MozJS-91. Several deprecated,
non-standard array and string functions that existed in MozJS-60 are
removed in MozJS-91.
For the complete list of removed array and string functions, see the 6.0 compatibility notes.
Example
Consider the following documents in the players
collection:
db.players.insertMany([ { _id: 12378, name: "Steve", username: "steveisawesome", first_login: "2017-01-01" }, { _id: 2, name: "Anya", username: "anya", first_login: "2001-02-02" } ])
The following example uses $where
and the hex_md5()
JavaScript function to compare the value of the name
field to an
MD5 hash and returns any matching document.
db.players.find( { $where: function() { return (hex_md5(this.name) == "9b53e667f30cd329dca1ec9e6a83e994") } } );
The operation returns the following result:
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Anya", "username" : "anya", "first_login" : "2001-02-02" }
As an alternative, the previous example can be rewritten using
$expr
and $function
. You can define custom aggregation
expression in JavaScript with the aggregation operator $function
.
To access $function
and other aggregation operators in
db.collection.find()
, use with $expr
:
db.players.find( {$expr: { $function: { body: function(name) { return hex_md5(name) == "9b53e667f30cd329dca1ec9e6a83e994"; }, args: [ "$name" ], lang: "js" } } } )
If you must create custom expressions, $function
is
preferred over $where
.